Damascus Steel: The Cutting Edge of Medieval Technology

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  • Опубліковано 15 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 28

  • @pedrosugliano9762
    @pedrosugliano9762 Рік тому +13

    this is some top tier educational content right here, thanks a lot to all those whose work made this possible, you all deserve the best.

  • @TP-ym1xe
    @TP-ym1xe Рік тому +13

    The vast amount of new knowledge you've shared in those 15 minutes was astounding! This is a criminally under-watched video. Your exposition needs more discussion and shares online and on social media.

    • @minerals.arizona
      @minerals.arizona  Рік тому +2

      Thank you for the kind words. Feel free to spread the word!

  • @definitelynosebreather
    @definitelynosebreather 2 роки тому +20

    What the hell.. this deserves to have way more views. Incredible work.

    • @minerals.arizona
      @minerals.arizona  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for your kind comment. We'll do our best to get it out there.

  • @misterangel8486
    @misterangel8486 Рік тому +5

    Impressive video.
    Highly informative.
    I agree with the others on comments, this video deserves a lot more views.
    Thank you very much👍

  • @wally9935
    @wally9935 2 роки тому +7

    Thank you for the great and informative video!

  • @greatkaafir7478
    @greatkaafir7478 Рік тому +24

    Damascus blades were first manufactured in the Near East from ingots of wootz steel that were imported from Southern India (present day Tamil Nadu and Kerala). The Arabs introduced the wootz steel to Damascus, where a weapons industry thrived.

    • @abdoexa
      @abdoexa Рік тому

      yes , Damascus words return to Damascus city in Syria , Damascus swords was made also by Othman century

    • @hishyamwahab1339
      @hishyamwahab1339 Рік тому

      Don't claim too much.. show me where yr blade..my blade.. u can Google keris .. until now we know how to create tht ... But we keep as scret

    • @shanuyadav7273
      @shanuyadav7273 Рік тому +1

      Yes thats makes sense since Arab traders settled in southern part of India in 7th century, they exported the wootz steel.

    • @prodigalfraudaddy
      @prodigalfraudaddy Рік тому

      @@shanuyadav7273 not just arab ,,even julis Caesar had an embassy in kerala

  • @tykehotep2865
    @tykehotep2865 6 місяців тому

    Thankyou really enjoyed that. I have to be honest I hadn't heard of Damascus till say a few year ago when purely by chance I came across the blade maker Sharup on you tube (love watching things being crafted but anway) so yeah looked up the cost of one and hmm yeah. Till 3 weeks ago I was in a gun shop and they had a selection of old damascus 3,5" outdoor knives for want of a better word so bought 2 for lets say dirt cheap took em home sharpened cleaned and dressed them
    And honestly I cannot stop gazing at the pattern once I start
    Sorry for the bad grammar and waffling
    On buy a nice Damascus you wont regret it lol

  • @canarddefer3574
    @canarddefer3574 Рік тому +1

    This is a very good introduction to the history of Damascus/Wootz steel; however you seem to be following the outdated notion that Damascus steel production was a technology in itself, rather than a happy accident of high quality ores being used in the crucible process (and we must remember that crucible steel of various grades was being commonly produced across the Middle east and Asia across the time period you discuss). Recent scholarship runs largely against the notion that Damascus became a lost technology: rather, it is accepted that the loss of a steady supply of manganese/vanadium rich ores robbed the Indian and Middle-Eastern swordsmiths of their previously high quality raw material. These sword makers did not lose their Damascus/Wootz technology - rather, they never had it in the first place, because, for all their excellence, they had no notion of how carbide-forming elements affected the crucible process. Why their supply dried up is subject to conjecture (perhaps the exhaustion of one or more seams of exceptionally high quality ore), but the fact that most metallurgists today point to manganese and vanadium carbides as the defining feature of the best quality Damascus/Wootz steels does seem to give the lie to the 'lost technology' theory.

    • @joefish4466
      @joefish4466 11 місяців тому

      You're minmizing the skill of those making those blades back in the day. All the "Damascus" blades currently available are pattern welded blades, which says a lot. Modern blacksmiths can easily make crucible steel with manganese/vanadium/chromium, but you don't see them turning these things into something resembling the original Damascus blades, which they could sell for far more than the pattern welded stuff they eagerly hock. I think the lost art reflects the loss of the source material AND the subsequent loss of the specific techniques that were used to shape those raw material into the classic Damascus blades.

  • @GrantHendrick
    @GrantHendrick Рік тому +1

    Wonderful video. Thank you!

  • @Economist96
    @Economist96 4 місяці тому

    Words have meaning: Iron DOES rust. A sword will snap, not shatter.

  • @65mto
    @65mto 8 місяців тому +2

    We should remember about carbon nanotubes and cementite nanowires in Damascus steel, they are important for it's amazing properties.

  • @vuzzler1
    @vuzzler1 2 роки тому +1

    Nice explanation

  • @CaritorSales
    @CaritorSales 10 місяців тому +3

    The Damascus steel is Orginally Orginated present day TELEGANA, Hyderabad Region south india, India.

  • @chrissinclair4442
    @chrissinclair4442 Рік тому

    Did Damascas have more carbon then other steel, but carbon nano tubes kept it from being brittle? Haven't finished watching yet so maybe it says.

  • @hishyamwahab1339
    @hishyamwahab1339 Рік тому

    It's happened cuz different types of iron.. the best blade mix meteor iron. ... Actually in different part in the world..we ll get different types of iron...

    • @kencarse3677
      @kencarse3677 Рік тому +1

      Iron is iron no differences. It’s the impurities or additives along with the process that makes the difference

  • @FireRevontulet
    @FireRevontulet 11 місяців тому +3

    my god,, this video is full of misinformation and badly researched history. And by the way, what they are passing as damascus steel images here are actually pattern welded steel examples

  • @Flyingthundergod4
    @Flyingthundergod4 3 місяці тому

    I think you meant india 😢